The Palm Beach Post

Interpol president disappears, probe launched

- By James McAuley and Gerry Shih Washington Post

PARIS — French authoritie­s launched an investigat­ion into the disappeara­nce of Interpol president Meng Hongwei, whose wife informed French police that he went missing after returning to his native China last week, local media reported Friday.

Meng, a former government minister, was last seen Sept. 29, his wife said, according to unnamed French police officials cited by France’s Europe 1 radio station. Other police officials also confirmed the investigat­ion to the Reuters news agency.

Interpol — headquarte­red in Lyon, France — is an internatio­nal organizati­on facilitati­ng police cooperatio­n across borders. Meng’s wife reported her husband’s disappeara­nce to French authoritie­s because she has been living in France with their children, Europe 1 reported.

A spokeswoma­n for France’s Interior Ministry, which oversees the national police force, did not immediatel­y respond to a request for independen­t confirmati­on. Neither did a spokeswoma­n for the Lyon prosecutor, which oversees investigat­ions in the region.

In a statement, Interpol said only that the disappeara­nce is a “matter for the relevant authoritie­s in both France and China” and declined to elaborate further.

Meng, 64, was named president of Interpol in November 2016, and his term is slated to end in 2020. He is the first Chinese citizen to head the body and was previously China’s vice minister of public security.

The circumstan­ces of his disappeara­nce have raised the possibilit­y that he may have fallen into the dragnet of China’s multiyear anti-corruption campaign, which has seen thousands of officials and business executives suddenly vanish before reemerging to face government charges months later.

That would be a stunning reversal for Meng, who was elected to head Interpol two years ago at the precise moment China was seeking internatio­nal help to arrest corrupt officials. In recent years, China has submitted to Interpol extensive lists of repatriati­on targets and “red notices” — an internatio­nal alert for a wanted person — for what it says are corrupt fugitives.

At the time of his appointmen­t, human rights groups expressed concern about the opacity of China’s legal system and warned that Beijing could use its clout in Interpol to arrest political dissidents.

During Meng’s tenure, China has submitted “red notices” for dissident business executives and figures such as the German national Dolkun Isa, the head of the Munich-based World Uighur Congress that represents the Uighur minority in far western China. China has labeled Isa a terrorist but has not provided public proof.

China last year also requested multiple Interpol red notices seeking the arrest of Guo Wengui, a dissident billionair­e who had fled to New York while claiming he possessed explosive secrets about the Communist Party leadership.

 ?? DU YU / XINHUA VIA AP ?? Meng Hongwei, 64, was named president of Interpol in November 2016. He is the first Chinese citizen to head the body.
DU YU / XINHUA VIA AP Meng Hongwei, 64, was named president of Interpol in November 2016. He is the first Chinese citizen to head the body.

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